318 
luables, the fum of 15 000,c00 of -French 
livres Tournois, of which 10,600,000 livres fhall 
be paid in a couriz of March, and 5,600,000 
in the courfe of ~.pril next. 
XIli. The VilIth article of the treaty of 
armifiice figned at Bol (Rey ‘erning the ma- 
nufcripts and cbj<*ts of art, fhali be carried into 
complete execution as fpeedily as poffible. 
XIV. The French army fhall evacuate Um- 
bria, Perugia, and Cametino, as foon as the 
Xth article of :he prefent ueaty thall Poe execut= 
ed and accompli} ihed. 
XV. The French army fhall evacuate the 
province of Macerata, excepting Ancona and 
- Fano, and their territories, as foon as the firft 
five millions of the fum mentioned in the 
XIIth article of the Dee. treaty ‘hal! have 
been paid and delivered. 
' XVI. The French fhall evacuate the terri- 
tory of the city of Fano, and the duchy of Ur- 
bino, as foon as the fecond five millions of the 
fam mentioned in the X{Ith article of the pre- 
fent treaty fhall have been delivered, and the 
iid, Xth, XIth, and XiIth fhall have been 
executed. The laft five millions, making up 
the whole of the fums ftipulated to be paid by 
the XIith article, fhall be paid, at sauhen in 
the courfe of April next. 
XVII. The French Republic ei to the 
Pope all its right to the different religious foun- 
dations in the city of Rome, and at Loretto; 
and the Pope cedes entirely to the French Re- 
public all the allodial property belonging to the 
holy fee, in the three provinces of Bologna, 
oe) and Romagna, and particularly the 
efiate of Mefola, and its dependencies; the 
Pope referving to himfelf, however, in cafe 
~ they fhall be feld, a third of the fums arifing 
from fach fale, which fhall be remitted as part_ 
of his contribution. 
XVII. His Holinefs fhall difavow, by his 
minifter at Paris, the affaffination of the fecre- 
tary of Legation, Bafieville ; and, in the courfe 
of the year, the fum of three hundred thoufand 
livres fhall be paid to, and divided among, thofe 
who have fuftered by this event. 
KIX. His Holinefs fhall fet at liberty all 
perfons in confinement on account of their poi!- 
tical opinions. 
XX. The commander in chief fhall permit 
all the prifoners of war from the troops of his 
Hiolinefs, to return home, as foon as he thal! 
have received the ratification of this treaty. 
XI. Until a commercial treaty thall be 
conciuded between the French Republic and the 
Pope, the commerce of the Republic thali be 
se-eftablifhed, and treated by the ftaies of his 
Holinefs on the fame footing as the nation moft 
favoured in its commerce. 
XXII. Coniormable to the 6th article of the 
treaty concluded at the Hague, in April, in the 
third year, the peace concluded by the prefent 
treaty ‘between the French Repubiic and his 
“Holinefs is declared to extend to the Batavian 
Rep: blic. 
"XXIII. The poft of France fhall be re-efta- 
blithed at Rome, in the fame manner as exified 
before, ; 
Public Affairs —Treaty between France and the Peis. 
To Cardinals Mat Te, 
[ April, 
AKIV. The School of Arts, inftituted at 
Rome for all the French, fhall be re-eftablithed, 
and jhali continue to be conduéted as beiore the 
war. The oe belonging to the Republic, 
where this fchool is Held, fhall be reftored 
without at 
XXV. All the state claufes, and condi- 
tions of the prefenttreaty fhall be, without ex- 
ception, obligatory fr ever, as wellon his Ho- 
lineis as on his fuccefiors. 
X™. VI. The pxefent treaty thall be ratified 
with the thorteft poffible delay. 
Made and figned at the head-quarters of 
Tolentino, by the ‘fid plenipoten- 
tiaries, I9th 
Feb, 1797. (Signed) BuonaparTeE, 
CAcauLtT. 
L. GALEPPI, 
L. Duca, Brascui, ONESTI, and 
CamiLLo, Marquis of Massra. 
The Cifpadam congrefs, on the 11th 
of March, had attained the two great 
objects cf its meeting : the eftablithing of 
the unity, and i: ae ty _ of the re~ 
public, and the formation cf a conflitu- 
tion. The republic was to ae of ten 
departments, Bologna was to be the cen- 
tre of the republic, and the feat of go- 
vernment. 
Revolutionary principles were fpread- 
ing inthe Venetian fiates._ The tree of 
liberty was planted at Pefchiera. At 
Brefcia fome of the inhabitants had joined 
the troops, and eppofed the revolutionifts 
but the latter being joined by 1500 of 
their friends from Bergamo, attacked the. 
military, made a part prifoners, and 
drove the ret out of town. 
West INDIES. 
His excellency, Sir Ralph Abercromby, 
2 his arrival at Barbadoes, acquainted 
_ council, that he had it in command 
om his majetty, ferthwith to raife in 
the windward and leeward iflands, five 
regiments of black troops, to confit of 
sco rank and file each, to be procured 
principally by purchafe in the different 
Britith iflands. 
The general affembly of Barbadoes 
took this matter into confideration on the 
28th of January, 1797. Sir John Gay 
tr ot 
EO 
Alleyne, the fpeaker; rofe and explained 
his motives for pror vofing refolutions ad@= 
verfe to the defigns of government. The 
affembly, after fome deliberation, refolv- 
ed, that the propofed meafure of raifing 
five regiments of black troops, would be 
more likely to prove deftruétive to the 
ifland than add to its defence. 
AMERICA. 
The differences between the French: 
__ Republic 
